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Chicago examiner sunday price five cents no 12 a m Chicago september 29 1912 sunday woman ally of virginia brooks found slain in w hammond victim was beaten to death j i by sluggers of vice ring ; says girl reformer mayor orders hunt for slayers body is found by husband conflicting stories stir sus picion open verdict is re turned by coroner's jury blagged to death because she was â– friend of virginia brooks and because she had aided in exposing dens of tice in west v hammond is believed to have been the fate of mrs ursula baranowski 517 east one hundred and fifty-seventh street ; with a deep cut on the back of her bead and buffering from other cuts and bruises | she was found early yesterday morning ' in an unconscious condition in front of her house her husband found her lying in the gut ter and as he attempted to pick her up she opened her eyes and muttered in polish they hit me they hit me again she lapsed into unconsciousness and before a physician could be summoned i she was dead she was partially con eclous only for an instant long enough to eay that she had been attacked but not long enough to tell who did it she was murdered because she helped me said miss brooks last night this la not tli6 first murder that has beei com mitted down here by these thugs and i sup pose it will not be the last but i'm going after them harder than ever when they start to kill women it is time for strenu ous measures to be taken against th:ra open verdict returned found s ceep cut or the back of her head a weli as various other lumps and cuts when deputy coroner julian conducted the inquest yesterday it was discovered that the woman's skull was fractured not withstanding this apparent evidence of foul play the jury brought in on open verdict in which no definite cause of death v as given likewise two physicians who examined the body yesterday morning stated last night that they believed mrs baranowski filed as a result of acute alcoholism these pnclans are dr harley a bradley of t hammond hnd dr william d wels lammond ind vertheless mayor k m wosczyznski west hammond instructed acting chief of police joseph mack and special ! policeman james kruse to investigate the case on the presumption that she was murdered one of the very peculiar features of tfce case is the conflict of stories told by various persons during the day it was first stated that mrs baranowski went to the saloon of stanley sztan near midnight friday night and failed to return within an hour then it was declared her husband btarted out to find her and discovered her lying half 1c the gutter in front of their home her clothes are declared to have been wet and muddy as if she had been dragged for some distance later from some defensive source it was vehemently declared that she had become intoxicated and had fallen down the steps leading to her house and bad thereby sustained the injuries that resulted in her death stories are conflicting i the story however did not account for le fact that she was lying on the outer ige of the pavement some distance om the foot o the stairway down which ic was said to have fallen still later it was declared that mrs arariowskl'a body was not cut and ruiseil and the story of a fall down lie airway was thrown aside as a theoretical mcoctlon fmaily came the coroner's inquest at inch s/.tuu the saloonkeeper was a wit ess lie declared that mrs batauowaal line to us saloon late friday uigut to get pitcher of beer she drank several glasses of beer said itau and then ordered her pitcher filled he also got 10 cents worth of whisky in bottle which she brougut wlieu she ft the saloon she was so intoxicated that lie took the whisky and left the pitcher t beer standing on the bar sztan s saloon is one of the places men ioued in miss brooks vice crusade as a lot on the landscape of west hammond for more than a year mrs baranowski ad been one of virginia brooks able as istants though she was the mother of seven children she is declared to have been familiar with every corner of west hain frequenmy she informed miss brooks of places the law was being violated id various ways and was recognized as a ctaneh ally of the west hammond joan of an pignatelli an exile forced out of france sailing for u s of miss duke's princely suitor after suicide at tempt due to expulsion special cable to the examiner paris sept 28.â€”prince ludovlci figna telli d'aragon who is alleged to have at tempted suicide because miss miiry i duke daughter of the tobacco millionaire rejected him has been expelled from ! france | the prince sailed for america to-lay j ! under the decree of expulsion though th fact that he bad been expelled did not be come public until after he had actually started the order had been issued some time ago but under the law it could not be served until september 24 the prince's friends yesterday made the statement that the prince was going back to the united states to seek the band of some other american heiress he appears to be well supplied with money and it is expected that some one is gambling ou his chances of capturing an heiress and tin been advancing money to him lie sent a touring car over to the united states by the steamer which sailed ahead of him j i ] eden at pole says cook explorer declares adam and eve were first discoverers kansas city mo sept 2s.â€”adam and eve were the first persons to discover the north pole according to dr frederick a cook arctic explorer in speaking be fore the business women's league i am convinced that the garden of eden was at the north pole said dr cook though i found no traces of apple trees and serpents there i did find coal beds 500 miles from the pole in which fos silized pond lilies were imbedded this ! shows that tropical plant life thrived there ionfp and that it was th first seat of civ j ilization i believe the eskimos are the i oldest race of the earth adam and eve | were eskimos burn northcoot picture 1,000 insurgent woodmen destroy likeness of former official sterling 111 sept 2s.â€”calmly and with grave seriousness the rockfalls camp of woodmen tonight burned the oil paint ing of former lieutenant governor north cott pnrchaar-d fifteen years ago the ceremony was attended by fully 1.000 mem bers of the order frinn northern Illinois following several inflammatory speeches by insurgent woodmen joseph wright the local leader poured tar over the oil pic ture which was surrounded by snavings and while the picture burned the wood men stood with hn:ids uncovered as the band played down went mcginty the sterling rockfalla and morrison bands played a dirge earl sails to woo in u s titled scot and companion both re ported fond of heiresses special cable to the examiner london sept 2b an interesting pas serger on the itteitnnia which galled for new york to-dÂ»y is the earl of leven a scotch peer of twenty-six one of the most desirable bachelors in great britain his traveling companion is the hon sid j ney htrbert and rumor ciedits each with the intei.tion of keeking ar american heir ess when lord leven was asked about his trip he said i have no plans the earl has a double title that of earl of leven and melville he is the fourteenth earl in the leven line and the elevertb in tn melville girl to be army flyer avlatrice will take tests for air scouts new york sept 28 miss bernetta millar an avia trice of canton 0 left for washington to-night to compete in the i tests for aerial scout work which are to he held at the military aviation field out side the national capital next week should the young woman who has had her air license less than three months pnss the tests she will be the first woman in the i government war aviation corps two army officers killed ared test lieutenant flying for his l cense takes corporal aloft and wrecks plane forgets to stop engine machine hits ground at ter rific speed while pilot is trying to change course aviation deaths yesterday corporal frank s scott of the united states army killed at col lege park school washington d c lieutenant l c rockwell of the united states army killed at 1 college park school washington d c j e longstaff formerly an eng lish army officer killed at hemp stead l i washington sept 28 striking the ground with terrific force when the guid ing rope of their aeroplane refused to work corporal frank s scott formerly of rldg way i'a was instantly killed late to-day and lieutenant l c rockwell who was iu charge of the wright flyer so badly in jured that he died two hours inter the accident occurred at tlic army aviation grounds of the college park school twelve miles from washington corporal scott was a passenger in the aeroplane the machine was totally de molished rockwell together with the 1 body of corporal scott as rusfied to tliej walter reeil uospitul in the automobile i of the school at the hospital it was found that rockwell had sustained double frac tures of each ley fractures of the skull and internal injuries from which he never recovered forgets to shut off engines lieutenant rockwell who bad previously made one short lliprht was attempting to meet*one of the tests required by the gov erument before receiving his license as a military aviator the requirement was that he should rise 000 feet in the air car rying one passenger and land within 130 feet of a given point rising in the air lieutenant rockwell and corporal scott waved to the assembled officers of tue school shortly before they started their descent as they came toward the earth the ma chine seemed to he working perfectly but just before landing lieutenant rockwell was seen to attempt to guide his plane to a more gradual incline the planes re fused to work and lieutenant rockwell forgetting to shut otf his engines hit the grouud at a speed of about seventy-five miles an hour Â« this is the fifth accident which has oc curred since aeronautics was introduced into the army and is the second to havt occurred at college i'ark within the past throe mouths lieutenant li h hazel hurst and charles welch a professional \\ ri^ht aviator being killed outright when a wing crumpled under the strain of a spiral glide english airman is killed hempstead l 1 sept 25.-j l long stuff formerly an english army officer uow flying at the hetapstead aviation plains cell iu his fariuan biplane about dark and was so badly injured that be died at 11 o'clock tonight at ihe nassau hospital pierre chevallier mechanic for lougs'.aff was with his employer whun the biplane fell and was seriously hut not fatally injured he will lose the si;;ht ot one eye and is injured about the head longstaff planned t take up a passenger but was forced to change propellers and so took his mechanic instead the left control wire became jammed at about fifty or sixty feet from the ground and the ma chine plunged downward with such force as to bury parts of the engine two feet ' in the ground longntaff formerly lived in leeds fnc land but lately had been flying on srout dnty with mexican rebels in chihuahua j sidias and woman tell all how police got 10,000 bandits chief still free women about whom bandit hunt centers at the top jeannette littje companion of doc dalzcll alias james w stacey whose love for him led him into a police trap at st lonis she made a confession yesterday to assistant chief of police schueltler ichich the police hope will lead io the recovery of the money stolen from the ca nadian hank at neic westminster b c at the left mrs lulu wilson who identified stacey as one of the men who beat lieutenant 3u}ns in a south side saloon at the riyhi mr blanche voight an eyewitness to the encounter icho is also expected to identify stacey sa.oinkeepei says he tock m ney to authori ies week alter turns was beaten ssterest in developments in th3 320,000 canadian bank robbery case ? centered about jeannette little the womsa rhom ssrteei^g " 5 to the ar rest of doc dalzsll unlil last night when james sidias told the real story of the intrigui.s which led t o the robbers downfall in chlagj and to a recovery of 310,000 of the loot â– the little woman had made a complete and startling confession of the whole of her nine years spent with the bank rob bers sidias proprietor of the sunset saloon in which lieutenant burns was beaten and robbed of his pistol september 10 supplied the missing links in a dramatic story of devotion and trickery among thieves jean ette little's part in the story and the dis appearance of 100,000 of the loot in the first place no one recovered the money which the police are holding he said in his first statement of the case i walked into chief mcweeny's office of my own volition and laid on his desk a bundle of 10,000 in 10 notes that was septem ber 18 a week after burnes had his fight with big charlie and by the way the police have not ar rested charlie he is not the frank west they are seeking i have never been shown a picture of him he is completely lost and he took with him about 100,000 he was too clever for them admits engineering robbery 1 have known charlie for a year he came around the place after a ions absence during the last of august and revived old acquaintances saturday september 7 he brought a suitcase into the saloon went into the back room and showed me ? 140,000 in canadian money he told me that he had engineered the cai.adian robbery and said that it was the biggest job of the kind ever pulled off he said that when he got rid of it â– e would be a rich man and would quit the business he didn't want to talk in the saloon he telephoned to me monday and i met him at eighteenth street and wabash ave watch milk label says health board housewives are warned to prevent breaking of the newr ordinance a warning to housewives to look at the labels of milk bottles to see if the new milk ordinance is being observed was issued yesterday by health commissioner george b young in his weekly bulletin when you get a bottle of milk says dr young it should either be labeled inspected or pasteurized in either case the label slionld bear the serial number of the permit issued by the health depart ment indicating that the producer or bot tler or both have complied with the re quirements of the new ordinance yisacb cap must also show the date of pasteurisation of the milk if it has been so treated dr young announces that the national association for the study and prevention of tuberculosis is urging physicians to i-ease rending comtnsptitm who are with out sufficient funds to colorado new mexico arizona california and texas tuberculosis can be cured in any part of the i'nlted states and it is not neces sary for a tubcrcu osls patient to go west says the association farm for honore palmer bhrevepobt i-a sept 28,-seveuty thousand dollars the biggest consideration on record for local farm property was paid by honore palmer of Chicago for the pat cash plantation of l.lioo acres present crops were not included in the sale of the farm which is owned by j h fullilove local planter an j is located four miles north of shreveport on red river pupils steal tombstone champaign 111 sept 2.s fcir st i dents of the university of Illinois stole a tombstone from the cemetery south of champaign and placed it on the front cam pus early this morning president james is irate and srrests mp.r follow Taft to call special session to intervene in mexico says dick ohio ex-senator in Chicago admits the president will act in the next few days to stop the outrages to citizens of the united states former united states senator charles dick of akron ohio who came to the city from washington on friday on business connected with president taft's campaign declared to ex-congress man c n fowler of new jersey and w hi hunter part twner of the tacoma tribune that official washington is deeply stirred over - conditions in mexico and that presi dent Taft will call an extra session ot congress which will undoubtedly re sult in armed intervention former senator dick is a close con fidant of president Taft and the fact that he has just come from washing ton stamps his statement as almost official last night he said to an ex aminer reporter that he could not speak for publication at this juncture though he admitted that information ihe had received in washington was of the gravest possible nature and i made a special session of congress in the near future an a solute certainty the reports received by the presi dent are of a serious nature said th former senator ready for special session will a special se^s'on of fo:.u â– â€¢ # .â€¢ be called he was asked there certainly win hi â– will it be called no v f \-. v . . i do not think it will oe soon as that i do r.o ruot so b i i terviewed on the subject ' " talk he said ex-senator dick is ch:iirrov.:i .>; ' â– ohio republican state centra i â– jmittee and h bulks large in natice jas well as state politics vfcat lie ha j to say on national issues conies witi "" { peculiar authority cripple in ordeal for girl to-day miss eihel smith accepts of fer of william rugh jr after a mer + ai struggle s after many consultation with tier mother miss ethel smith of gary ind j consented yesterday to accept the offer of william hugh jr the crippled gary | newsboy to sacrifice his leg in the effort to save her life the operation will take [ place to-day in the gary general hospital to which miss smith was removed friday night the cuticle from rugh's crippled limb will cover the burns from which miss smith is suffering and which she re ceived when the gasoline tank exploded on the motorcycle on which she was riding with her affianced dr j a craig the smith family physi cian will perform the operation miss smith and young hugh after being ether ized will be placed side by side on the operating table when strips of cuticle one inch wide will be transferred from rugh's limb to cover the burned portions of miss smith's body afterward rugh's leg will be amputated it was not without a severe mental straggle that the injured young woman agreed to accept rugh's offer she felt greatly embarrassed over the publicity at teudin git rugh was attending to his news stand in gary when the news of miss smith's de cision was brought to him he was over joyed i am gtad xhe is willing he said 1 am more than willing and i do not want to be pictured as being a martyr for her sake for i do not deserve that title rugh's offer was known all over gary | and the fact that it bad been accepted soon became public property his news i stand was thronged lie whs the center i of a circle of admiring women most of | the.day to his great embarrassment his trade quadrupled and he had to engage an j assistant his helper known only as : jim is a deaf mute but he seemed to i understand all orders yesterdny and rarely made a mistake in serving customers rugh wrote jast night to his parents mr and mrs william rugh sr farmers near i'ortland ore telling then of the | forthcoming operation capital rushes work for war in mexico washington sept 13 it is reported here to-night on excellent authority anj j in spite of a diplomatic denial fro!u pres i idem taft's secretary at beverly that thu i president is preparing to call a special sessioii of congress to consider armed in tervention in mexico j the resides it u understood is to ! place before conÂ«rer probably tbls com â– ing week the record r>2 an accumulation of j outrages against t vricans and other for i h residents of iihe troubled suothern ixj/tillc calculated to make that body take decisive action a report of communications from for eign powers has also been prepared by the state department which projects tho contention that ii the united states doe not act foreign nations must be permitted and will act in their own defense z?z in terest politics affects move it is conceded by all that if oungrea does authorize intervention it will change the entire political horizon it is polnteh out that a war administration bat never been turned out of power by the voters on the principal that it is bad policy to trade horses while erossiu a stream in addition to tho known significant facts a telegram ues been seen here iu which former senator dick of ohio wno is now in Chicago is reported to have told c t fowler of new jersey that a special session of congress would be called by president toft next week seii ator dick is quoted as baying that tho president will present fnforiiiaxiou to cou i gress that has been burpressed ami wbic?i i is of such i nature that win will result former senator dick i ;:". the bÂ«ad o the national guard ot oliio ii'ii l.i.ut.-.i that he had been preparing lor wax some time first step is taken the stale department is admittedly .-. eitinj pressure on madero by laying u him the catalogue of sinus of tlie revolii j tios against american citizens and pi ! erty added to this is an appalling bum o current and ynst indeumuies j this act of the mt.-ue department ./ ! preetdents count for siuythiug is always i laid as a foundation for drastic action when accompanied by the statement ivfaich has gene forward that there luib beeu into erable iy in hottttog witt anie j creditors ! the navy l-nirtment noting under 01 i ders iroiu the state dejiartment uj til ready sent the i>e m'line into meilcan waters at vera cruz marines are to be landed at that point a t'io first opportu nity and it seems evident now that toe opportunity will be quickly seized it 1e cop^dered highly lgsiiiaa!:t tha continued on 2d page 3d column ibicago and icinity idy and continued cool sun | monday fa . light to berate lortheriy minds range of temperatures yester : hichest b6 ' lowest 01 averazfi 54 success never comes to any man he has to go after it there are some hundreds of thou sands of you readers who have different needs and desires in view if you will only exert intelligent energy on the want ad section of th Chicago examiner to-day you are bound to succeed three want ad offices 9 west madison street near stnte street 330 west madison street hearst buildiug and 27 north fifth avenue phone main 5000 or automatic 44344 you can phone your want ads to the examiner this edition consists of l-.news drama 2 news vaudeville aâ€”sports music society 7 want ads foreign real estate aijtos financial s city life b magazine Â«â€” editorial a co3iic fiction

Chicago examiner sunday price five cents no 12 a m Chicago september 29 1912 sunday woman ally of virginia brooks found slain in w hammond victim was beaten to death j i by sluggers of vice ring ; says girl reformer mayor orders hunt for slayers body is found by husband conflicting stories stir sus picion open verdict is re turned by coroner's jury blagged to death because she was â– friend of virginia brooks and because she had aided in exposing dens of tice in west v hammond is believed to have been the fate of mrs ursula baranowski 517 east one hundred and fifty-seventh street ; with a deep cut on the back of her bead and buffering from other cuts and bruises | she was found early yesterday morning ' in an unconscious condition in front of her house her husband found her lying in the gut ter and as he attempted to pick her up she opened her eyes and muttered in polish they hit me they hit me again she lapsed into unconsciousness and before a physician could be summoned i she was dead she was partially con eclous only for an instant long enough to eay that she had been attacked but not long enough to tell who did it she was murdered because she helped me said miss brooks last night this la not tli6 first murder that has beei com mitted down here by these thugs and i sup pose it will not be the last but i'm going after them harder than ever when they start to kill women it is time for strenu ous measures to be taken against th:ra open verdict returned found s ceep cut or the back of her head a weli as various other lumps and cuts when deputy coroner julian conducted the inquest yesterday it was discovered that the woman's skull was fractured not withstanding this apparent evidence of foul play the jury brought in on open verdict in which no definite cause of death v as given likewise two physicians who examined the body yesterday morning stated last night that they believed mrs baranowski filed as a result of acute alcoholism these pnclans are dr harley a bradley of t hammond hnd dr william d wels lammond ind vertheless mayor k m wosczyznski west hammond instructed acting chief of police joseph mack and special ! policeman james kruse to investigate the case on the presumption that she was murdered one of the very peculiar features of tfce case is the conflict of stories told by various persons during the day it was first stated that mrs baranowski went to the saloon of stanley sztan near midnight friday night and failed to return within an hour then it was declared her husband btarted out to find her and discovered her lying half 1c the gutter in front of their home her clothes are declared to have been wet and muddy as if she had been dragged for some distance later from some defensive source it was vehemently declared that she had become intoxicated and had fallen down the steps leading to her house and bad thereby sustained the injuries that resulted in her death stories are conflicting i the story however did not account for le fact that she was lying on the outer ige of the pavement some distance om the foot o the stairway down which ic was said to have fallen still later it was declared that mrs arariowskl'a body was not cut and ruiseil and the story of a fall down lie airway was thrown aside as a theoretical mcoctlon fmaily came the coroner's inquest at inch s/.tuu the saloonkeeper was a wit ess lie declared that mrs batauowaal line to us saloon late friday uigut to get pitcher of beer she drank several glasses of beer said itau and then ordered her pitcher filled he also got 10 cents worth of whisky in bottle which she brougut wlieu she ft the saloon she was so intoxicated that lie took the whisky and left the pitcher t beer standing on the bar sztan s saloon is one of the places men ioued in miss brooks vice crusade as a lot on the landscape of west hammond for more than a year mrs baranowski ad been one of virginia brooks able as istants though she was the mother of seven children she is declared to have been familiar with every corner of west hain frequenmy she informed miss brooks of places the law was being violated id various ways and was recognized as a ctaneh ally of the west hammond joan of an pignatelli an exile forced out of france sailing for u s of miss duke's princely suitor after suicide at tempt due to expulsion special cable to the examiner paris sept 28.â€”prince ludovlci figna telli d'aragon who is alleged to have at tempted suicide because miss miiry i duke daughter of the tobacco millionaire rejected him has been expelled from ! france | the prince sailed for america to-lay j ! under the decree of expulsion though th fact that he bad been expelled did not be come public until after he had actually started the order had been issued some time ago but under the law it could not be served until september 24 the prince's friends yesterday made the statement that the prince was going back to the united states to seek the band of some other american heiress he appears to be well supplied with money and it is expected that some one is gambling ou his chances of capturing an heiress and tin been advancing money to him lie sent a touring car over to the united states by the steamer which sailed ahead of him j i ] eden at pole says cook explorer declares adam and eve were first discoverers kansas city mo sept 2s.â€”adam and eve were the first persons to discover the north pole according to dr frederick a cook arctic explorer in speaking be fore the business women's league i am convinced that the garden of eden was at the north pole said dr cook though i found no traces of apple trees and serpents there i did find coal beds 500 miles from the pole in which fos silized pond lilies were imbedded this ! shows that tropical plant life thrived there ionfp and that it was th first seat of civ j ilization i believe the eskimos are the i oldest race of the earth adam and eve | were eskimos burn northcoot picture 1,000 insurgent woodmen destroy likeness of former official sterling 111 sept 2s.â€”calmly and with grave seriousness the rockfalls camp of woodmen tonight burned the oil paint ing of former lieutenant governor north cott pnrchaar-d fifteen years ago the ceremony was attended by fully 1.000 mem bers of the order frinn northern Illinois following several inflammatory speeches by insurgent woodmen joseph wright the local leader poured tar over the oil pic ture which was surrounded by snavings and while the picture burned the wood men stood with hn:ids uncovered as the band played down went mcginty the sterling rockfalla and morrison bands played a dirge earl sails to woo in u s titled scot and companion both re ported fond of heiresses special cable to the examiner london sept 2b an interesting pas serger on the itteitnnia which galled for new york to-dÂ»y is the earl of leven a scotch peer of twenty-six one of the most desirable bachelors in great britain his traveling companion is the hon sid j ney htrbert and rumor ciedits each with the intei.tion of keeking ar american heir ess when lord leven was asked about his trip he said i have no plans the earl has a double title that of earl of leven and melville he is the fourteenth earl in the leven line and the elevertb in tn melville girl to be army flyer avlatrice will take tests for air scouts new york sept 28 miss bernetta millar an avia trice of canton 0 left for washington to-night to compete in the i tests for aerial scout work which are to he held at the military aviation field out side the national capital next week should the young woman who has had her air license less than three months pnss the tests she will be the first woman in the i government war aviation corps two army officers killed ared test lieutenant flying for his l cense takes corporal aloft and wrecks plane forgets to stop engine machine hits ground at ter rific speed while pilot is trying to change course aviation deaths yesterday corporal frank s scott of the united states army killed at col lege park school washington d c lieutenant l c rockwell of the united states army killed at 1 college park school washington d c j e longstaff formerly an eng lish army officer killed at hemp stead l i washington sept 28 striking the ground with terrific force when the guid ing rope of their aeroplane refused to work corporal frank s scott formerly of rldg way i'a was instantly killed late to-day and lieutenant l c rockwell who was iu charge of the wright flyer so badly in jured that he died two hours inter the accident occurred at tlic army aviation grounds of the college park school twelve miles from washington corporal scott was a passenger in the aeroplane the machine was totally de molished rockwell together with the 1 body of corporal scott as rusfied to tliej walter reeil uospitul in the automobile i of the school at the hospital it was found that rockwell had sustained double frac tures of each ley fractures of the skull and internal injuries from which he never recovered forgets to shut off engines lieutenant rockwell who bad previously made one short lliprht was attempting to meet*one of the tests required by the gov erument before receiving his license as a military aviator the requirement was that he should rise 000 feet in the air car rying one passenger and land within 130 feet of a given point rising in the air lieutenant rockwell and corporal scott waved to the assembled officers of tue school shortly before they started their descent as they came toward the earth the ma chine seemed to he working perfectly but just before landing lieutenant rockwell was seen to attempt to guide his plane to a more gradual incline the planes re fused to work and lieutenant rockwell forgetting to shut otf his engines hit the grouud at a speed of about seventy-five miles an hour Â« this is the fifth accident which has oc curred since aeronautics was introduced into the army and is the second to havt occurred at college i'ark within the past throe mouths lieutenant li h hazel hurst and charles welch a professional \\ ri^ht aviator being killed outright when a wing crumpled under the strain of a spiral glide english airman is killed hempstead l 1 sept 25.-j l long stuff formerly an english army officer uow flying at the hetapstead aviation plains cell iu his fariuan biplane about dark and was so badly injured that be died at 11 o'clock tonight at ihe nassau hospital pierre chevallier mechanic for lougs'.aff was with his employer whun the biplane fell and was seriously hut not fatally injured he will lose the si;;ht ot one eye and is injured about the head longstaff planned t take up a passenger but was forced to change propellers and so took his mechanic instead the left control wire became jammed at about fifty or sixty feet from the ground and the ma chine plunged downward with such force as to bury parts of the engine two feet ' in the ground longntaff formerly lived in leeds fnc land but lately had been flying on srout dnty with mexican rebels in chihuahua j sidias and woman tell all how police got 10,000 bandits chief still free women about whom bandit hunt centers at the top jeannette littje companion of doc dalzcll alias james w stacey whose love for him led him into a police trap at st lonis she made a confession yesterday to assistant chief of police schueltler ichich the police hope will lead io the recovery of the money stolen from the ca nadian hank at neic westminster b c at the left mrs lulu wilson who identified stacey as one of the men who beat lieutenant 3u}ns in a south side saloon at the riyhi mr blanche voight an eyewitness to the encounter icho is also expected to identify stacey sa.oinkeepei says he tock m ney to authori ies week alter turns was beaten ssterest in developments in th3 320,000 canadian bank robbery case ? centered about jeannette little the womsa rhom ssrteei^g " 5 to the ar rest of doc dalzsll unlil last night when james sidias told the real story of the intrigui.s which led t o the robbers downfall in chlagj and to a recovery of 310,000 of the loot â– the little woman had made a complete and startling confession of the whole of her nine years spent with the bank rob bers sidias proprietor of the sunset saloon in which lieutenant burns was beaten and robbed of his pistol september 10 supplied the missing links in a dramatic story of devotion and trickery among thieves jean ette little's part in the story and the dis appearance of 100,000 of the loot in the first place no one recovered the money which the police are holding he said in his first statement of the case i walked into chief mcweeny's office of my own volition and laid on his desk a bundle of 10,000 in 10 notes that was septem ber 18 a week after burnes had his fight with big charlie and by the way the police have not ar rested charlie he is not the frank west they are seeking i have never been shown a picture of him he is completely lost and he took with him about 100,000 he was too clever for them admits engineering robbery 1 have known charlie for a year he came around the place after a ions absence during the last of august and revived old acquaintances saturday september 7 he brought a suitcase into the saloon went into the back room and showed me ? 140,000 in canadian money he told me that he had engineered the cai.adian robbery and said that it was the biggest job of the kind ever pulled off he said that when he got rid of it â– e would be a rich man and would quit the business he didn't want to talk in the saloon he telephoned to me monday and i met him at eighteenth street and wabash ave watch milk label says health board housewives are warned to prevent breaking of the newr ordinance a warning to housewives to look at the labels of milk bottles to see if the new milk ordinance is being observed was issued yesterday by health commissioner george b young in his weekly bulletin when you get a bottle of milk says dr young it should either be labeled inspected or pasteurized in either case the label slionld bear the serial number of the permit issued by the health depart ment indicating that the producer or bot tler or both have complied with the re quirements of the new ordinance yisacb cap must also show the date of pasteurisation of the milk if it has been so treated dr young announces that the national association for the study and prevention of tuberculosis is urging physicians to i-ease rending comtnsptitm who are with out sufficient funds to colorado new mexico arizona california and texas tuberculosis can be cured in any part of the i'nlted states and it is not neces sary for a tubcrcu osls patient to go west says the association farm for honore palmer bhrevepobt i-a sept 28,-seveuty thousand dollars the biggest consideration on record for local farm property was paid by honore palmer of Chicago for the pat cash plantation of l.lioo acres present crops were not included in the sale of the farm which is owned by j h fullilove local planter an j is located four miles north of shreveport on red river pupils steal tombstone champaign 111 sept 2.s fcir st i dents of the university of Illinois stole a tombstone from the cemetery south of champaign and placed it on the front cam pus early this morning president james is irate and srrests mp.r follow Taft to call special session to intervene in mexico says dick ohio ex-senator in Chicago admits the president will act in the next few days to stop the outrages to citizens of the united states former united states senator charles dick of akron ohio who came to the city from washington on friday on business connected with president taft's campaign declared to ex-congress man c n fowler of new jersey and w hi hunter part twner of the tacoma tribune that official washington is deeply stirred over - conditions in mexico and that presi dent Taft will call an extra session ot congress which will undoubtedly re sult in armed intervention former senator dick is a close con fidant of president Taft and the fact that he has just come from washing ton stamps his statement as almost official last night he said to an ex aminer reporter that he could not speak for publication at this juncture though he admitted that information ihe had received in washington was of the gravest possible nature and i made a special session of congress in the near future an a solute certainty the reports received by the presi dent are of a serious nature said th former senator ready for special session will a special se^s'on of fo:.u â– â€¢ # .â€¢ be called he was asked there certainly win hi â– will it be called no v f \-. v . . i do not think it will oe soon as that i do r.o ruot so b i i terviewed on the subject ' " talk he said ex-senator dick is ch:iirrov.:i .>; ' â– ohio republican state centra i â– jmittee and h bulks large in natice jas well as state politics vfcat lie ha j to say on national issues conies witi "" { peculiar authority cripple in ordeal for girl to-day miss eihel smith accepts of fer of william rugh jr after a mer + ai struggle s after many consultation with tier mother miss ethel smith of gary ind j consented yesterday to accept the offer of william hugh jr the crippled gary | newsboy to sacrifice his leg in the effort to save her life the operation will take [ place to-day in the gary general hospital to which miss smith was removed friday night the cuticle from rugh's crippled limb will cover the burns from which miss smith is suffering and which she re ceived when the gasoline tank exploded on the motorcycle on which she was riding with her affianced dr j a craig the smith family physi cian will perform the operation miss smith and young hugh after being ether ized will be placed side by side on the operating table when strips of cuticle one inch wide will be transferred from rugh's limb to cover the burned portions of miss smith's body afterward rugh's leg will be amputated it was not without a severe mental straggle that the injured young woman agreed to accept rugh's offer she felt greatly embarrassed over the publicity at teudin git rugh was attending to his news stand in gary when the news of miss smith's de cision was brought to him he was over joyed i am gtad xhe is willing he said 1 am more than willing and i do not want to be pictured as being a martyr for her sake for i do not deserve that title rugh's offer was known all over gary | and the fact that it bad been accepted soon became public property his news i stand was thronged lie whs the center i of a circle of admiring women most of | the.day to his great embarrassment his trade quadrupled and he had to engage an j assistant his helper known only as : jim is a deaf mute but he seemed to i understand all orders yesterdny and rarely made a mistake in serving customers rugh wrote jast night to his parents mr and mrs william rugh sr farmers near i'ortland ore telling then of the | forthcoming operation capital rushes work for war in mexico washington sept 13 it is reported here to-night on excellent authority anj j in spite of a diplomatic denial fro!u pres i idem taft's secretary at beverly that thu i president is preparing to call a special sessioii of congress to consider armed in tervention in mexico j the resides it u understood is to ! place before conÂ«rer probably tbls com â– ing week the record r>2 an accumulation of j outrages against t vricans and other for i h residents of iihe troubled suothern ixj/tillc calculated to make that body take decisive action a report of communications from for eign powers has also been prepared by the state department which projects tho contention that ii the united states doe not act foreign nations must be permitted and will act in their own defense z?z in terest politics affects move it is conceded by all that if oungrea does authorize intervention it will change the entire political horizon it is polnteh out that a war administration bat never been turned out of power by the voters on the principal that it is bad policy to trade horses while erossiu a stream in addition to tho known significant facts a telegram ues been seen here iu which former senator dick of ohio wno is now in Chicago is reported to have told c t fowler of new jersey that a special session of congress would be called by president toft next week seii ator dick is quoted as baying that tho president will present fnforiiiaxiou to cou i gress that has been burpressed ami wbic?i i is of such i nature that win will result former senator dick i ;:". the bÂ«ad o the national guard ot oliio ii'ii l.i.ut.-.i that he had been preparing lor wax some time first step is taken the stale department is admittedly .-. eitinj pressure on madero by laying u him the catalogue of sinus of tlie revolii j tios against american citizens and pi ! erty added to this is an appalling bum o current and ynst indeumuies j this act of the mt.-ue department ./ ! preetdents count for siuythiug is always i laid as a foundation for drastic action when accompanied by the statement ivfaich has gene forward that there luib beeu into erable iy in hottttog witt anie j creditors ! the navy l-nirtment noting under 01 i ders iroiu the state dejiartment uj til ready sent the i>e m'line into meilcan waters at vera cruz marines are to be landed at that point a t'io first opportu nity and it seems evident now that toe opportunity will be quickly seized it 1e cop^dered highly lgsiiiaa!:t tha continued on 2d page 3d column ibicago and icinity idy and continued cool sun | monday fa . light to berate lortheriy minds range of temperatures yester : hichest b6 ' lowest 01 averazfi 54 success never comes to any man he has to go after it there are some hundreds of thou sands of you readers who have different needs and desires in view if you will only exert intelligent energy on the want ad section of th Chicago examiner to-day you are bound to succeed three want ad offices 9 west madison street near stnte street 330 west madison street hearst buildiug and 27 north fifth avenue phone main 5000 or automatic 44344 you can phone your want ads to the examiner this edition consists of l-.news drama 2 news vaudeville aâ€”sports music society 7 want ads foreign real estate aijtos financial s city life b magazine Â«â€” editorial a co3iic fiction